In-Wall Speakers Denver CO

In-wall speakers are great. These custom speakers can really bring out the surround sound system experience. You do need to know where the best in-wall speaker placement is. That’s what you will learn here. Don’t invest in home audio equipment that won’t make much difference. LCR speakers can be set up in deceptive places that enhance sound quality. Make sure you hire professional A/V installers that understand how placement affects sound quality. Listed below you will find local references for home electronics stores around Denver that can give you more information.

Cherry Creek Audio
(303) 758-4434
156 Steele St
Denver, CO
Cherry Creek Audio
303-758-4434
80206-5216
Denver, CO
U.S. Tech
(303) 393-0522
111 S. Madison Street
Denver, CO
Listen Up
303-744-1179
685 South Pearl Street
Denver, CO
Powder Networks, LLC
(303) 698-9900
4601 Quebec StreetUnit C2
Denver, CO
Conundrum Technologies
970-926-2554
2732 Larimer Street, Suite A
Denver, CO
Dtr Technologies
303-573-6288
2525 West 6Th Avenue Dtr Technologies
Denver, CO
Listen Up, Inc.
(303) 778-0780
685 South Pearl
Denver, CO
Electronic Integration
(303) 761-7277
1205 South Platte River Drive
Denver, CO
Electronic Integration
(303) 761-7277
1205 S. Platte River
Denver, CO

In-Wall Speakers

Admit it, you're addicted. You put in-wall speakers in every room. You install them in living rooms, bedrooms, kitchens, home theaters, bathrooms, decks and hallways. You are popping them in everywhere, just like light cans.

In-wall speakers launched the custom installation market, and for years have helped define it. They are an economic driving force in this industry. Big manufacturers don't care about small installers. Smaller in-wall speaker manufacturers, however, thrive on our market. They give us great margins and are essential to our bottom lines. They consistently make our installations easy and profitable.

So why would I blather on about in-wall addiction as if we should be in a recovery group? Our industry has successfully wired and installed thousands of homes full of speakers that basically sound about as good as a dentist's office. The result is quantity, but at lower quality.

Good speaker design depends on properly built enclosures that take bass performance, resonant frequency, bass porting and many other critical factors into the design. Speakers just need the right boxes to perform.

Because even expensive in-walls don't have an acoustic enclosure, they can't compare with a quality bookshelf speaker. You can find some very good sounding bookshelf speakers at around $400 a pair. They beat the pants off of similarly priced in-walls.

Before you think I'm nuts, let me rant on. There is a place for in-wall speakers. Because of their great markups, ease of installation and how non-invasive they are to decorating schemes, they are an easy go-to solution. I always use them in bathrooms and secondary bedrooms. In most other rooms and many applications, however, they are a very poor solution.

I walked through a Malibu home the other day where the proud owner showed me his new home theater system. The installers used five in-wall speakers. The left and rights were round ceiling speakers in the wrong locations, 30 feet apart. They were aimed straight down at the empty end of the room without any chance of hitting the seating. The center speaker was rectangular and located in the wall just above the TV, too low to allow a big cabinet, and again not aimed at the seating. This is a textbook failure of using in-walls improperly.

The installers who worked on this particular home should not have installed wiring and cut holes for the LCR speakers. For the same money they should have sold my friend three matched quality bookshelf speakers and placed them in the TV cabinet. The sound for music or home theater would have been far superior, the locations would have been correct and they could have been properly aimed at the couch.

My advice is to use in-walls only when there is no other choice. Be professional and creative. You can often place speakers in furniture. Look for cabinets or shelves where bookshelf speakers can be installed at about six to eight inches high. Sometimes placing speakers on top of cabinets hides them. Cabinets ca...

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